Also last week, Sheen made headlines when American Idol executive producer Nigel Lythgoe quipped that he wanted Sheen to fill one the Idol seats vacated by departing judges Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez.

Asked by Leno whether he would join a show like Idol, Sheen quipped, “I had never thought about it. I heard it on the news … so I came up with my terms, and I published it. I’m waiting to hear back.”

“I think I could be helpful, give these kids some guidance without leading them to suicide,” he added.

On a more serious note, Sheen announced Monday that he would be donating one percent of the profits he receives from Anger Management, his new FX sitcom, to the United Service Organizations (USO), for a minimum of $1 million.

As Sheen told Leno, the decision derived after the USO approached him with an idea to name a TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury) Center after the former Two and a Half Men star.

“[So I said], How about I give you something that could be an asset that grows over time, which is one point over time? … It should be worth a minimum of $1 million, and hopefully a lot more than that, because these guys are the real heroes,” he told Leno.

Why don’t they do a remake of that movie that starred James Stewart who wished he didn’t ever exist, starring Charlie Sheen, where Charlie gets to have a look at what the world would have been like if he never existed and he finds his children don’t exist, his wife has married a man that doesn’t really care about her and his brother’s dead because Charlie was never really there to drown out the music with the messages that made him jump off Niagara Falls – incite young men to see the positive side of themselves and see reason to change, where they give life a second chance before they listen to that sort of music